Airbnb Has $0 Listings for Hurricane Florence Evacuees

This guest house outside of Atlanta is listed for $0 for those fleeing Hurricane Florence.

Courtesy Airbnb

Hurricane Florence is heading straight for the southeast coast, and is expected to make landfall early Saturday, dumping several feet of rain and bringing high winds and ocean surges. North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia have all declared states of emergency, and many of the states' highways are directing cars one way: west. To help evacuees, Airbnb is enlisting its 'Open Homes' hosts once again, to offer up their guest houses, extra bedrooms, and more for free. Already, there are more than 131 apartments, entire homes, and rooms available in Atlanta, Charlotte, Greensboro, Columbia, and other cities, all listed on Airbnb's site for just $0.

If you're evacuating the southeastern seaboard and don't yet have a place to stay, head to Airbnb's dedicated Open Homes site for Florence and click "find shelter." (You'll have to create an Airbnb account if you don't have one already.) You don't have to provide any paperwork or additional information to prove that you're a Florence evacuee, but Airbnb says that "any reservation reported to have been made by a non-evacuee will be cancelled and guests must leave the listing immediately." The free housing is available now through October 1.

Got an Airbnb in the area? You've likely already received an email from the company urging you to sign up. But if you have spare room and want to open your home, it's not too late to sign up on Airbnb to open your home—plus Airbnb's insurance of $1 million in guest damage protection still applies to $0 bookings. (Hosts are not compensated whatsoever for the $0 bookings, and Airbnb does not collect its usual fees.)

An Airbnb home currently available to Hurricane Florence evacuees.

Courtesy Airbnb

Airbnb and its hosts have been offering this kind of disaster relief since Hurricane Sandy in 2012, providing free refuge as needed—like in the aftermath of 2015's tragic Paris shooting, when displaced neighbors and relief workers were given a place to stay. But it became an official initiative last year, when the home-sharing company made Open Homes a permanent fixture on its website. Any host can volunteer and open up to evacuees, refugees, victims' family members (like in the case of the Orlando nightclub shooting in 2016), or relief workers deployed to the area, among others. Guests in need can then find shelter for as short or as long as needed, at no extra cost. As of last June, Airbnb's Open Homes program had housed 1,900 people.

“Anywhere in the world where we have a community, we can help people in need within hours,” Airbnb's co-founder Joe Gebbia told Fortune when Open Home officially launched. “In some cases, we can help the community respond to people in need faster than the government.”